Tyr |
What began with as a simple Weekly Dose of Prog has spawned into a movement that is dominating my time (much to my enjoyment). The Decemberists' classic, The Hazards of Love (see the WDoP here), has gotten me into a folk bender, first with just their discography, and then into folk as a whole.
While it did begin on the more docile side of things, with The Decemberists, Mumford & Sons and a little Iron & Wine (jury's still out on that one), it quickly jumped on the metal bandwagon. Bands like Turisas (I've been looking forward to their newest release for a while now), Týr have already popped up, and I'm going to try a foray into some Celtic/black folk - something that I've not had a lot of experience with - with Cruachan and Primordial (but that may only appear a little bit).
Turisas |
I wanted to dedicate March to folk, mostly of the Irish/Celtic kind, something I decided in the middle of January. I figured that with Saint Patrick's Day, there isn't a better month for the music of my heritage, but I preemptively hit this subject by a week or so, during the waning days of February. So for this month, expect a large number of Celtic folk rock/punk bands, a good portion of indie/alternative folk rock, and a heaping of folk metal.
2 comments:
Lately when I've been having a craving for folk I listened to Circulus, Comus, Espers, Faun Fables, Gaë Bolg, Magna Carta, Gryphon, Voice of the Seven Woods (more psych), Hölderlin, Kiss the Anus of a Black Cat (what a name, huh?), Troisieme Rive, Trees and White Willow (the first album).
My wife and I love The Hazards of Love (we keep saying to each other, "This is how I am repaid..." for everything we do wrong to each other).
Hell man, I've only heard of two or three of those before. Hefty list, I'll have to check some of them out.
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